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992 F.

2d 1285

Jane KLEIN and Douglas Klein, her husband


v.
John S. HOLLINGS; Ryder Truck Rental, Inc.; Tennessee
Kartage, Inc.; Ryder Temperature Control Carrier, Inc.
John S. Hollings; Ryder Truck Rental, Inc. and Tennessee
Kartage, Inc. a/k/a Ryder Temperature Control
Carriage, Appellants.
Jane KLEIN and Douglas Klein, her husband
v.
John S. HOLLINGS; Ryder Temperature Control Carrier, Inc.
John S. Hollings; Ryder Truck Rental, Inc. and Tennessee
Kartage, Inc. a/k/a Ryder Temperature Control
Carriage, Appellants.
Nos. 92-1646, 92-1647.

United States Court of Appeals,


Third Circuit.
Argued Feb. 23, 1993.
Decided May 11, 1993.

Edward L. McCandless (argued), McCandless & Associates, Philadelphia,


PA, for appellants.
Peter J. Neeson (argued), Daniel J. Ryan, and John R. Brown, LaBrum &
Doak, Philadelphia, PA, for appellees.
PRESENT: HUTCHINSON, NYGAARD and SEITZ, Circuit
Judges.OPINION OF THE COURT
HUTCHINSON, Circuit Judge.

Appellants, John S. Hollings, Ryder Truck Rental, Inc., Tennessee Kartage, Inc.
and Ryder Temperature Control Carriage, Inc. (collectively "the Defendants"),
appeal a November 26, 1990 order of the United States District Court for the

Eastern District of Pennsylvania. That order granted Appellees, Jane Klein and
her husband Douglas Klein ("the Kleins"), a new trial after a jury returned a
verdict in favor of all the Defendants in an action arising from an October 18,
1988 automobile accident. The Defendants also appeal the judgment entered
against them as a result of the second trial in which a second jury found them
90% negligent, and the district court's denial of their motion for judgment n.o.v.
or for another new trial. In this respect, the Defendants argue that the district
court abused its discretion in granting the Kleins a second trial. They contend
that the district court committed a number of errors during the second trial
which mandate vacating the judgment and remanding for a third trial.
2

We hold that the district court did abuse the somewhat limited discretion it has
to grant a new trial because a jury's verdict is against the weight of the
evidence. Accordingly, we will vacate the November 26, 1990 order of the
district court granting the Kleins a new trial, vacate the judgment entered on
October 16, 1991 in the second trial and order the district court to reinstate the
verdict reached by the first jury.

The district court had jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A.
1332 (West Supp.1992). We have jurisdiction over this appeal from the final
judgment and order of the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. 1291 (West
Supp.1992).

I.
4

This action arises out of an automobile accident on the night of October 18,
1988. At about 11:30 p.m., appellee John Hollings ("Hollings") was driving his
tractor-trailer rig west on Route 73 in the Schwenksville-Skippack area in
Pennsylvania. Route 73 is a two lane road that runs east-west through
Skippack. Unfamiliar with the area, Hollings decided to bed down for the night
along the side of the road. He also decided to turn the truck around to park
beside Route 73 facing east. To make the turn, Hollings turned left onto
Cressman Road, a north-south road which intersects Route 73, and backed up
across Route 73 until his vehicle sat at a stop sign on Cressman Road, north of
Route 73.

Hollings testified at the first trial that he looked both ways, allowed a few cars
to pass, then observed no traffic and proceeded slowly into the intersection
with the intention of making a left turn into the eastbound lane of Route 73. A
local resident, Marilyn Gallagher, observing from her front porch, testified that
before going inside her home she watched the truck complete approximately
three-quarters of its turn across the westbound lane. She saw no oncoming

traffic. Testimony at trial established that it would take approximately nine to


ten seconds before the rear of Hollings's vehicle would clear the intersection.
The speed limit on this section of Route 73 is 45 miles per hour.
6

About 400-500 feet east of the intersection of Route 73 and Cressman, Route
73 crests a hill and then runs down to the intersection. As the truck was
executing its turn, Jane Klein, travelling westbound on Route 73 in her 1980
Toyota station wagon, drove over the hill. The parties dispute Mrs. Klein's
speed. She testified that she saw "really bright lights" in the eastbound lane
after coming over the hill but was at first unconcerned because they were not in
her lane. Appellants' Appendix (App.) at 24a. She did notice that the headlights
"didn't appear to be moving right, moving very slowly." Id. Then, Mrs. Klein
realized that part of a truck was in her lane. At once, she says, she applied her
brakes. They left 68 feet of skid marks but did not avoid the collision. Mrs.
Klein's car struck the left rear tandem wheel of the trailer while it was still
partly in the westbound lane. Despite being restrained by a seatbelt, Mrs. Klein
fractured her left humerus and right ankle and also suffered lacerations of the
face.

Hollings testified that he never saw Mrs. Klein's car until just before impact.
He testified that he had generally been looking around in all directions but just
before impact he was watching the rear of the truck to make sure it did not hit
anything on the side of the road.

Shortly after the accident, Pennsylvania State Trooper Anthony Gant arrived on
the scene. After interviewing witnesses and observing the situation, Gant issued
Hollings a citation for violation of 75 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. 3323(b) (1977),
failure to yield the right of way at a stop sign. Hollings, a Florida resident who
returned there following the accident, did not come back to Pennsylvania to
contest the citation and a state court found him guilty in absentia.

The Kleins filed this diversity action in the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Their theory of recovery was Hollings's
negligence. Trial commenced on February 12, 1990. At this first trial both sides
called accident reconstruction experts. The Kleins called Dr. Ian Jones who
gave an opinion about the speed of Mrs. Klein's vehicle based on the damage it
sustained, technically called the "crush" of the vehicle. Dr. Jones opined that
the vehicle was travelling approximately 15 miles per hour at impact and, given
the length of the skid marks, that the pre-braking speed was approximately 41
miles per hour. Dr. Jones also testified to his personal observations at the crash
site. He testified that sitting in his car at the intersection and looking east, he
could see the headlights of an oncoming car from approximately 500 feet.

Upon questioning from the court, Dr. Jones indicated that he had observed the
actual beams of the headlights of the approaching car and not just their glow.
He further opined that the top of the hill was approximately 400 to 450 feet
from the intersection. Dr. Jones estimated that Mrs. Klein could see the trailer
approximately 140 feet before the point of impact.
10

The Kleins also called Dr. Herschel Leibowitz who testified about the
nighttime visibility from Mrs. Klein's perspective. Dr. Leibowitz stated that
people need between 1.2 and 2.5 seconds to respond to hazards under the
conditions present on the night of the accident. He also testified that he
believed Mrs. Klein first saw the trailer portion of Hollings's tractor-trailer rig
approximately 100 feet from impact and that the accident was caused by her
inability to see the trailer any sooner.

11

The Defendants called Dr. Serge Borichevsky who testified that Hollings's turn
took approximately 10 seconds to complete. He further testified that the crush
of the vehicle indicated that Mrs. Klein was travelling about 30-35 miles per
hour at impact and 48-50 miles per hour just before the accident. Borichevsky
concluded that Mrs. Klein was approximately 739 to 782 feet from the
intersection when Hollings began his turn and opined that her inattentiveness
caused the accident. He also concluded that at this distance, Hollings would not
have seen her car when he began his turn.

12

The Defendants also called Dr. Lawrence Thibault, a biomedical engineer and
Associate Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. Dr.
Thibault testified that the crush of the vehicle indicated an impact speed of 3035 miles per hour. Dr. Thibault also examined Mrs. Klein's medical records and
attempted to corroborate the impact speed from the severity of her injuries
using the Abbreviated Injury Scale ("A.I.S."). The A.I.S., a study published by
the American Association of Automotive Medicine, is based on reconstructions
of numerous accidents with variables, inter alia, for the type of individual, the
type of crash and the type of restraint device in use. The A.I.S. then correlates
speed with injury. Using this method of computation, Thibault again calculated
that the speed at the moment of impact was 30-35 miles per hour.

13

The district court refused to permit Trooper Gant to testify about the citation he
issued to Hollings. The court held, because Gant was not present at the time of
the accident, that the citation was not sufficiently probative of the actual
occurrence to outweigh the prejudice involved in admitting a violation of state
law. The court also relied on the fact that Hollings did not return to challenge
the citation in granting the Defendants' motion in limine.

14

On February 15, 1990 the jury returned a verdict in favor of all defendants. In
answer to special interrogatories, the jury found that Hollings was not negligent
but that Mrs. Klein was. The Kleins made a timely motion for a new trial on
February 22, 1990 but did not file an accompanying brief or order as required
by Local Rule 20. The Kleins also failed to order a transcript of the first trial as
the local rule also requires. The Defendants filed a motion to dismiss based on
both procedural irregularities and substantive grounds. On March 16, 1990 the
Kleins ordered a transcript of the first trial. On March 20, 1990 the Kleins filed
a response to the Defendants' motion to dismiss alleging substantial compliance
with the rules. On May 17, 1990 the district court dismissed the Kleins' motion
for a new trial for lack of prosecution. It noted that the transcript had been
ready for over a month and the Kleins had failed to pursue their motion. On
May 22, 1990 the Kleins filed a motion to vacate the district court's May 17,
1990 order under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). At that time, they also
filed a memorandum in support of their motion for a new trial.

15

On November 26, 1990 the district court reversed itself, vacated the May 17,
1990 order and granted the Kleins a new trial. It held that the jury's finding that
Hollings was not negligent was against the weight of the evidence. The district
court based its decision on two factors. It first relied on evidence tending to
show that Hollings was not looking at the lane in which Mrs. Klein was
travelling at the time of the accident. This, the court concluded, indicated
negligence under Pennsylvania law. It also relied on its own observation that,
based on the trial evidence of what transpired while Hollings sat at the
intersection, "[i]f he had looked, he ought plainly to have seen at least the glow
of the approaching headlights of plaintiff's vehicle, if not the vehicle itself."
App. at 91a-92a.

16

The new trial commenced on October 7, 1991. It differed from the initial trial
in a number of significant ways. First, the district court permitted State Trooper
Gant to testify that he issued Hollings a citation for failure to yield the right of
way. The court concluded that the Defendants opened the door for such
testimony when they elicited testimony from Trooper Gant on crossexamination that the lighting of the trailer rig conformed to state laws. Second,
the district court barred some of the expert testimony of Defendants' witness
Dr. Thibault. Thibault again sought to testify as to the speed of the impact
based upon the A.I.S. scale. The district court now decided to exclude the
testimony as speculative and without sufficient scientific basis to be admissible
under the Federal Rules of Evidence relating to expert testimony. Third, the
district court permitted Dr. Jones to testify over objection to an observational
experiment he conducted between the trials in which he attempted to ascertain
the point at which Hollings would have seen the glow of the headlights from

Mrs. Klein's car. Finally, the district court instructed the jury that it was the
truck driver's duty to maintain a vigil of the lane in which Mrs. Klein was
travelling at all times.
17

The second jury found Mrs. Klein only 10% negligent and awarded her
damages in the amount of $324,000. The Kleins filed a motion to mold the
verdict to add delay damages and the Defendants filed a motion for judgment
n.o.v. or a new trial on October 25, 1991. By a memorandum opinion and order
dated July 6, 1992, the district court denied the Defendants' motion and molded
the second jury award so that the judgment was $359,564.47 with interest from
October 11, 1991. The Defendants appeal this judgment on the basis of
prejudicial error in the conduct of the second jury trial and that the second
verdict was against the weight of the evidence. They also appeal the district
court's November 26, 1990 order setting aside the first jury verdict and granting
a new trial.

II.
18

It is generally said that we review the grant of a new trial for an abuse of
discretion. Rotondo v. Keene Corp., 956 F.2d 436, 438 (3d Cir.1992). Our
degree of scrutiny, however, differs depending on the reasons for granting the
new trial. To the extent that a new trial is granted purely on a question of law,
we exercise plenary review. Id.; Waldorf v. Shuta, 896 F.2d 723, 737 (3d
Cir.1990). Conversely, the district court's latitude on a new trial motion is
broad when the reason for interfering with the jury verdict is a ruling on a
matter that initially rested within the discretion of the court, e.g. evidentiary
rulings, see Bhaya v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 922 F.2d 184, 187 (3d
Cir.1990), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 111 S.Ct. 2827, 115 L.Ed.2d 997 (1991) or
prejudicial statements made by counsel. See Lind v. Schenley Indus., Inc., 278
F.2d 79, 90 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 364 U.S. 835, 81 S.Ct. 58, 5 L.Ed.2d 60
(1960). Where, however, the district court grants the motion because it believes
the jury's decision is against the weight of the evidence "closer scrutiny is
required by us on review. This is especially true when, as here, 'the litigation
deals with material which is familiar and simple, ... lying well within the
comprehension of [the] jurors....' " Hourston v. Harvlan, Inc., 457 F.2d 1105,
1107 (3d Cir.1972) (quoting Lind, 278 F.2d at 91).

19

Along the continuum of discretion given the district court over these matters,
we note that this case lies in the area where the district court receives the least
deference because it concerns a matter--whether Hollings saw or should have
seen the glow of the headlights--easily understood by a jury, see Lind, 278 F.2d
at 91, along with matters of Pennsylvania law on which the district court's

interpretation receives no deference. See Waldorf, 896 F.2d at 737.


20

We identified the competing concerns in Williamson v. Consolidated Rail


Corp., 926 F.2d 1344 (3d Cir.1991) where we stated:

21

When the district court grants a motion for a new trial based on the weight of
the evidence, the court has:

22 some extent at least, substituted [its] judgment of the facts and the credibility of
to
the witnesses for that of the jury. Such an action effects a denigration of the jury
system and to the extent that new trials are granted the judge takes over, if he does
not usurp, the prime function of the jury as the trier of facts. It then becomes the
duty of the appellate tribunal to exercise a closer degree of scrutiny and supervision
than is the case where a new trial is granted because of some undesirable or
pernicious influence obtruding into the trial.
23 278 F.2d at 90. Accordingly, the district court ought to grant a new trial on the
Lind,
basis that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence only where a
miscarriage of justice would result if the verdict were to stand. EEOC v. Delaware
Dep't of Health and Social Servs., 865 F.2d 1408, 1413 (3d Cir.1989) (quoting
Shanno v. Magee Indus. Enters., Inc., 856 F.2d 562, 567 (3d Cir.1988)). Where the
subject matter of the litigation is simple and within a layman's understanding, the
district court is given less freedom to scrutinize the jury's verdict than in a case that
deals with complex factual determinations such as passing "upon the nature of an
alleged newly discovered organic compound in an infringement action." Lind, 278
F.2d at 90-91.
....
24
25

Despite the limited nature of the district court's discretion in granting a new
trial because a jury's verdict is against the weight of the evidence, we recognize
that considerable deference remains due to that court's determination that a
verdict is against the weight of the evidence. The trial judge observes "the
witnesses and follow[s] the trial in a way that we cannot replicate by reviewing
a cold record." Roebuck v. Drexel Univ., 852 F.2d 715, 735 (3d Cir.1988).
Nevertheless, new trials because the verdict is against the weight of the
evidence are proper only when the record shows that the jury's verdict resulted
in a miscarriage of justice or where the verdict, on the record, cries out to be
overturned or shocks our conscience. See Delaware Dep't of Health, 865 F.2d at
1413.

26

Williamson, 926 F.2d at 1352, 1353. We decided that our task was to "examine

the record to see if the district court could have reasonably concluded that a
miscarriage of justice would occur if the jury's verdict were left stand." Id. at
1348 (citing Shanno, 856 F.2d at 567). We apply the Williamson standard here.
III.
27

In granting the new trial after the jury returned a verdict for the Defendants, the
district court stated:The defendant Hollings testified that, before pulling out
from the stop sign on Cressman Road, he looked both ways and did not observe
any approaching traffic. Immediately before the impact, he was looking back
over his left shoulder to make sure that the wheels of the trailer would clear the
intersection. Except for a flash of light immediately before the impact, he never
saw plaintiff's vehicle at all.

28

On the basis of the testimony of defendant Hollings himself, it seems clear that
he failed to maintain a proper lookout, and that, in violation of the Pennsylvania
Motor Vehicle Code, he failed to yield the right of way. Under that statute, it
was his obligation not to proceed onto the through highway without
ascertaining that it was reasonably safe for him to do so. If he had looked, he
ought plainly to have seen at least the glow of the approaching headlights of
plaintiff's vehicle, if not the vehicle itself.

29

Plaintiff's expert assumed it would take the tractor-trailer some nine seconds to
complete the turn onto route 73. Defense experts placed the time limit as
between 9.6 and 10.1 seconds. There was straight-line visibility of
approximately 500 feet. When the defendant began his left-turn maneuver,
plaintiff's vehicle at least must have been approaching the brow of the hill, and
the approaching headlight glow should have been apparent. Moreover,
defendant Hollings' failure to notice plaintiff's vehicle at any time before the
accident shows conclusively his inattentiveness.

30

I conclude, therefore, that the jury's finding of no negligence on the part of the
defendant driver is contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and
must be set aside.

31

App. at 91a-92a. The district court's reasons for deciding to grant the new trial
can be fairly said to depend on two factors: (1) its belief that Hollings should
have at least seen the glow of the headlights and had he seen the glow, his
negligence would have been established; and (2) its belief that Hollings's
testimony that he did not see Mrs. Klein's car until shortly before impact
conclusively demonstrated he was inattentive.1

A.
32

We begin with the district court's determination that Hollings "ought plainly to
have seen at least the glow of the approaching headlights ... if not the vehicle
itself." Id. Implicit in that statement is the district court's belief that had
Hollings seen Mrs. Klein's headlight or its glow, he would have been negligent
in proceeding into the intersection. Pennsylvania law sets forth no such strict
rule.2

33

Section 3323 of the Pennsylvania Vehicle Code provides in relevant part:

34 Duties at stop signs.-- ... After having stopped, the driver shall yield the right-of(b)
way to any pedestrian in a crosswalk or to any vehicle in the intersection or
approaching on another roadway so closely as to constitute a hazard during the time
when the driver is moving across or within the intersection or junction of roadways.
35

75 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. 3323(b). This statute imposes a duty to check the


roadway before proceeding. Under section 3323 a driver must maintain a
distance in excess of that which would "constitute a hazard." Accord Van Tine
v. Cornelius, 355 Pa. 584, 50 A.2d 299, 301 (1947) (vehicle may cross road
only where, in exercise of reasonable care, driver believes crossing may be
made without danger of collision). Many Pennsylvania cases reenforce the view
that it is not illegal for a car to proceed into the road in the face of oncoming
traffic if the driver reasonably believes that his maneuver can be completed
without collision.3 See Pokusa v. Taylor, 409 Pa. 41, 185 A.2d 331, 332
(1962); Dougherty v. Merchants' Baking Co., 313 Pa. 557, 169 A. 753, 754
(1934); Noyes v. Sternfeld, 164 Pa.Super. 461, 65 A.2d 433, 435 (1949).4
Accordingly, even had Hollings seen the glow of the headlights, he may still
have been justified in proceeding forward so long as a reasonable person would
have thought, after exercising due care at the outset, that his turn could be
completed without collision.

36

What Hollings did see is clearly relevant in determining whether he could have
reasonably thought it was safe to proceed. We, therefore, must review the
evidence that was presented at trial concerning Mrs. Klein's approach to the
intersection. It contains five references to whether Hollings saw the headlights
of Mrs. Klein's car, four that support the jury's verdict and one that arguably
could support the district court's conclusion.

37

On direct examination, Hollings testified that as he sat at the intersection of


Cressman Road and Route 73 just before executing his turn, he looked to the

east, the direction from which Mrs. Klein was approaching, and saw no cars or
headlights. He then began his turn. Marilyn Gallagher, an eyewitness who lived
at the intersection of Cressman Road and Route 73, testified that she observed
Hollings complete approximately three-quarters of his turn before she turned
away. She testified that before turning away, she looked both ways on the road
and "there [was] nothing coming." App. at 9a. The Defendants' expert, Dr.
Borichevsky, opined that given Mrs. Klein's rate of approach, it was likely that
Hollings did not see Mrs. Klein's car before he entered the intersection. Mrs.
Klein testified that when she came over the crest of the hill, the cab of the truck
was already in the eastbound lane. This admission supports an inference that
Hollings's turn was already well underway at the time the car came over the hill
and that he had started it before the time Mrs. Klein's headlights were visible.
38

The district court may have relied on the testimony of the Klein's expert, Dr.
Jones, who testified on cross-examination to the distance at which headlights
should have been seen in the following exchange:

39

JONES: As I say, I measured the distance which you would see headlights
coming towards you at approximately 500 feet.

40

Q: You didn't measure to the crest of the hill?

41

COURT: Would that in your view--before you got to the top of the hill or after
you got to the top of the hill?

42

JONES: It would be before it got to the top of the hill. Your eye height is
usually about 44 inches above the ground.

43

COURT: You would estimate the top of the hill is what, about 400 feet from
the accident, more than that, less than that?

44

JONES: 400, 450 feet. The important thing though is I did it at night because
what you are seeing in the headlights the crest of the hill in daylight I don't
think is particularly relevant.

45

Q: I just want to know what the distance was. You estimate now to be about
400 feet.

46

COURT: 400 to 450, he says.

47

JONES: The measurement I actually took was the distance I was sitting in my
car when I saw headlights at the intersection. And that distance I measured
approximately 500 feet.

48

COURT: When you say you saw headlights, you saw the actual head lamp
rather than just a glow of?

49

JONES: Yes.

50

....

51

Q: Did you reach any opinion as to whether the glow on the oncoming
headlights from the plaintiff's vehicle would have been visible to the driver of
the truck before pulling out?

52

JONES: I stood at the intersection and timed when I could see lights of
oncoming vehicles coming up over the brow of hill and that time was about
nine seconds.

53

Appellees' Supplemental Appendix (Supp.App.) at 25A-26A-1, 29A. It is


unclear from the last exchange whether Dr. Jones meant that cars could be seen
from approximately nine seconds away at night or that the glow of the
headlights could be seen for nine seconds before they crested the hill. We, like
the district court, will assume the latter. In any event, the district court
apparently agreed with Dr. Jones, disbelieved the direct testimony of Mrs.
Gallagher and Hollings and concluded Hollings should have seen Mrs. Klein
coming before he started to turn.

54

As discussed supra, Hollings had a duty to observe the westbound lane,


ascertain whether he could proceed safely in an exercise of reasonable care and
then proceed. The jury had before it evidence from which it could reasonably
infer that Hollings looked and saw nothing that would give him reason to
believe he could not make his turn without endangering other motorists. The
jury was entitled to believe the Defendants' experts. Their estimates placed
Mrs. Klein 739 to 782 feet from the point of impact and at least 250 feet on the
other side of the hill when Hollings last checked her lane.5 In short, given the
evidence presented at trial, the jury could have reasonably inferred that
Hollings saw nothing before he proceeded into the intersection.

B.

55

The district court also relied on Hollings's failure to keep a vigil in the
westbound lane in which Mrs. Klein was travelling while he was making his
turn to bolster its conclusion that the jury's verdict was against the weight of the
evidence. The district court cited Hollings's testimony that he never saw Mrs.
Klein's car until the last moment and that he was looking towards the back of
his truck at the time of the accident. The district court determined that even
though Hollings might have been justified in beginning his turn, he negligently
failed to continue to look into the westbound lane.

56

Pennsylvania law is not entirely clear on the duty that exists once one proceeds
into an intersection. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in Billow v. Farmers
Trust Co., 438 Pa. 514, 266 A.2d 92, 93 (1970), imposed a separate, seemingly
incompatible, duty to the one identified by the district court. In Billow, the
supreme court upheld a non-suit based upon contributory negligence when a
vehicle proceeded from a southern stop sign into a westbound lane after only
looking to the westbound lane while at the stop sign. The court held that a
failure to keep a continuing, proper vigil to the westbound lane (the lane being
turned into, not the lane being crossed) was negligent. Thus, Billow establishes
a duty to continue to observe the lane into which the vehicle is turning. If both
the district court's and Billow's statements of the law are correct, Hollings
would have had a duty to continue to look to both the west and eastbound lanes
throughout his turn.

57

The Kleins rely on Leasure v. Heller, 436 Pa. 108, 258 A.2d 855 (1969), where
the court stated, "even if the motorist has the right of way, in such a situation
[where a left turn is being made across a line of traffic] he must continue to
look for oncoming traffic." Id. 258 A.2d at 858 (emphasis omitted). Leasure,
however, is distinguishable. It involved the contributory negligence of a driver
who, seeing an oncoming vehicle less than 500 feet away travelling at 50
m.p.h., nevertheless turned in front of that vehicle. Id. 258 A.2d at 857.
Moreover, the court did not decide Leasure solely on the basis of a turn made
too close to another vehicle to be executed safely. The plaintiff testified that the
last time he looked at the oncoming car was when he was 50 feet away from
the point at which he made the turn. Id. at 857-58. The court therefore found
the driver of the vehicle attempting the turn contributorily negligent because he
began his turn without looking again into the lane he was about to cross.

58

Hollings testified that he did check the oncoming lane as well as the lane into
which he was travelling before he started to turn, thus satisfying Leasure.
Neither Leasure nor Billow imply a duty to continuously check the lane being
crossed after determining that a turn may be made safely and then commencing
it. Pennsylvania courts have expressly noted that "a driver ... is not bound to

look in all directions simultaneously nor need he 'swivel his head like a
ventriloquist's dummy' in order to be free of contributory negligence." Bascelli
v. Bucci, 244 Pa.Super. 347, 368 A.2d 754, 759 (1976) (citing Goldenberg v.
Watkins, 191 Pa.Super. 5, 155 A.2d 478 (1959) and quoting Taylor v. Mountz,
387 Pa. 321, 127 A.2d 730, 733 (1956)).
59

Another line of cases, not referred to by the Kleins, have held that when view
of the lane that must be crossed is obstructed, the driver pulling out into an
uncontrolled highway should continue to look into the lane he is crossing until
he can reasonably ascertain that the crossing may be made in safety. In Lehner
v. Schellhase, 341 Pa. 260, 19 A.2d 91 (1941), the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court held, while the northbound plaintiff discharged his duty to look both
ways before proceeding into an uncontrolled intersection, the fact that the view
of the eastbound lane was partially obstructed by a building and two parked
cars created a duty to continue to look when the plaintiff began to cross the
eastbound lane. Higgins v. Jones, 337 Pa. 401, 11 A.2d 158, 159 (1940)
emphasized the need for a motorist with an obstructed view of a lane to be
crossed to continue to look into the oncoming lane while executing a turn. In
Riley v. McNaugher, 318 Pa. 217, 178 A. 6, 7-8 (1935), the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court held a plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence in failing to
continue a vigil in the oncoming lane while crossing a lane. There, the
plaintiff's view while sitting at the stop sign was obstructed by a house and
some trees. See also Helfrich v. Brown, 213 Pa.Super. 463, 249 A.2d 778
(1968).

60

These decisions present a special case of the duty to observe the lanes of traffic
before moving forward in a reasonable manner. Essentially they hold where a
driver cannot see far enough into the oncoming lane to proceed into the road
safely, that it remains incumbent on the person making the turn to continue to
look down the lane to be crossed as the turn commences. Where a driver's view
of the lane he proposes to cross is obstructed, it is plainly unreasonable for that
driver to proceed without continuing to look at the oncoming lane until he can
see whether there are potential safety threats in it. A driver retains a duty even
after stopping and looking before entering an obstructed intersection "to
continue to look and to keep his car under such control that he can stop at any
moment and avoid a collision." Id. 249 A.2d at 781. At some point, however,
this duty comes into conflict with the primary duty to look into the lane into
which the turn is being made.

61

We do not think Pennsylvania law imposes a duty that would require a driver to
look in all directions at all times. Such a rule would impose an impossible feat
of observation. Instead, in a negligence action we ask whether the driver acted

reasonably under the circumstances. We think this record shows the substantial
evidence presented at the first trial enabled the jury to reach the determination
it did on that ultimate fact issue. Hollings did not testify that he looked
exclusively to the back of his truck during the turn. He testified that "I was
looking towards the back and to the front. It is an ongoing process. You just
don't sit there and look towards the back continuously." App. at 28a. He later
characterized his lookout as "look[ing] back and look[ing] forward, a glancing
kind of ongoing process." 3 Transcript of February 14, 1990 trial at 280. The
jury, therefore, had sufficient evidence to conclude that Hollings discharged
whatever duty he had to observe the oncoming lane.
62

The evidence upon which the district court relied to find Hollings inattentive,
namely that he never saw Mrs. Klein's vehicle until immediately before impact,
is also capable of two competing reasonable inferences. The first is that
Hollings was inattentive and negligent as the district court held. The second
possible inference is that Mrs. Klein approached so quickly that Hollings,
exercising reasonable care, never had an opportunity to see her.6 Either way,
verdicts based on either inference after resolution of the conflicts in the
evidence on this record in favor of the verdict winner is not bizarre or so strange
that it indicates serious injustice. Where evidence is in conflict and subject to
two interpretations, the trial judge should be reluctant to grant a new trial. GBS
Meat Indus. Pty. Ltd. v. Kress-Dobkin Co., 474 F.Supp. 1357, 1362
(W.D.Pa.1979), aff'd, 622 F.2d 578 (3d Cir.1980). The second explanation that
Hollings acted reasonably is not inherently implausible, it is supported by the
evidence and, because it was the conclusion reached by the jury, we think it
should stand.

63

Recognizing that district courts are entitled to a fair degree of appellate


deference when they decide whether to grant a new trial, we hold that here the
district court incorrectly substituted its own judgment for that of the jury on
Hollings' negligence and the cause of the accident. Pennsylvania law does not
impose strict liability on a driver who is involved in an automobile accident
outside his or her own lane. The plaintiff must prove negligence. The Kleins
were given that opportunity at the first trial and the jury found they had not
proved their case. Though the evidence was conflicting, we cannot conclude
that the jury's resolution of those conflicts and the inferences it drew in
concluding that Hollings acted reasonably shock our conscience or are likely to
have resulted in a miscarriage of justice. Accordingly, we hold that the district
court erred in granting a new trial.

64

We will, therefore, vacate the district court's order of November 26, 1990,
vacate the judgment entered on October 16, 1991 in the second trial and order

the district court to reinstate the jury verdict rendered in the first case.

In its July 6, 1992 order denying Defendants' motion for a new trial after the
second jury decided against them, the district court said, for the first time, that
an additional reason for granting the Kleins' motion for a new trial was "the
jury may well have been led astray by some purported 'expert' testimony
presented by the defendant." App. at 137. The expert testimony referred to was
that of the Defendants' expert Dr. Thibault who had partly based his opinion on
speed at impact on the Abbreviated Injury Scale ("A.I.S."). In any event, the
record indicates that the Defendants called another expert at the first trial who
testified about impact speed without reference to the A.I.S. The Kleins had an
opportunity to question the use of the A.I.S. study on cross-examination and the
district court itself questioned the witness about the basis of his opinion and the
possible shortcomings in A.I.S.'s methodology. Under the circumstances, we
are not persuaded that the admission of this witness's testimony justified a new
trial

The duty of care owed in this negligence action is at least that established by
the Pennsylvania Vehicle Code. See Van Tine v. Cornelius, 355 Pa. 584, 50
A.2d 299, 301 (1947); Dougherty v. Merchants' Baking Co., 313 Pa. 557, 169
A. 753, 754 (1934); Smith v. Brooks, 394 Pa.Super. 327, 575 A.2d 926, 933
(1990), alloc. denied, 527 Pa. 625, 592 A.2d 45 (1991); Noyes v. Sternfeld, 164
Pa.Super. 461, 65 A.2d 433, 435-36 (1949)

Thus, to the extent that the Kleins sought recovery based on the theory that
Hollings was negligent solely because the accident took place in Mrs. Klein's
lane, their theory is not supported by Pennsylvania law

We note that these cases were decided under earlier provisions of the Vehicle
Code; however, there is no material difference between these provisions and
current law

A quick review of the math of the situation reveals that it is not as "plain" as
the district court thought that Hollings saw the headlights. The Kleins' experts
testified that Mrs. Klein was travelling between 38-40 m.p.h. before applying
her brakes. Defendants' experts testified that she was going between 48-50
m.p.h. The speed limit on that portion of the road is 45 m.p.h. The experts
agreed that Hollings's turn would have taken about 9-10 seconds and the
accident occurred just as Hollings finished his turn. Finally, the parties
generally agree that the crest of the hill was between 400 and 500 feet from the
intersection. Using these numbers, we can calculate within the reasonable limits
a jury would be entitled to infer from the evidence what Mrs. Klein's potential

distance from Hollings was at the time he began his turn. In doing so, we will
assume the distance from the crest to the intersection is 475 feet and that the
turn took 9.5 seconds
Kleins' estimate: 39 m.p.h. x 9.5 sec. = 543 ft. = 68 ft. from crest
Defendants' estimate: 49 m.p.h. x 9.5 sec. = 683 ft. = 208 ft. from crest
At speed limit: 45 m.p.h. x 9.5 sec. = 627 ft. = 152 ft. from crest
6

Hollings's testimony at trial was to that effect. At trial he stated that he was
constantly looking forward and back to ensure the truck was headed in the right
direction and would not strike anything. When questioned about the
implications of the fact that he never saw Mrs. Klein's car the following
exchange occurred:
Q: So for the several seconds the Klein vehicle was travelling westbound on
Route 73 approaching your tractor-trailer, you never saw it, did you?
A: I never did see it because it came at a very high rate of speed.
App. at 28a.

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